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PRIMITIVE WEEVILS
BRENTIDAE
B
rentidae are sometimes called “primitive
weevils” because they have straight antennae
(while the other very large family in the superfamily
Curculionoidea, the Curculionidae, have antennae
that are angled). There are two large subgroups of
Brentidae, the subfamilies Brentinae and
Apioninae, as well as a number of smaller
subfamilies.
The subfamily Brentinae usually have elongated,
dark-colored adults, and larvae that develop feeding
on fungi inside dead wood. They are almost entirely
confined to the tropics and subtropics, and very
uncommon in temperate zones; only two species
reach southern Europe, three are found in the USA,
and one in New Zealand. One of the European
species, Amorphocephalus coronatus, is extremely
unusual among weevils, as it lives and breeds as
a scavenger in the nests of ants.
Apioninae, which are small, pear-shaped weevils
that feed on living plants and have larvae that
develop in seeds or seedheads, are much more
widespread, with hundreds of species distributed
family
Brentidae
known species
4,000
distribution
Worldwide except Antarctica. Subfamily
Brentinae mainly in the tropics, subfamily
Apioninae widespread
habitat
Subfamily Brentinae generally in tropical
forests, breeding in fallen wood. Apioninae
occur in a wide range of habitats depending
on their host plant, but they are characteristic
grassland weevils
size
1.5–90 mm
diet
Brentinae larvae feed on fungi growing in
their tunnels in dead wood, or in some rare
cases, such as Amorphocephalus, feed in
the nests of the ants with which they live.
Apioninae feed on living plants or in a few
BRENTIDAE—Primitive Weevils